Mughal Urdu language poet
Khwaja Haider Ali Aatish | |
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Khwaja Haider Ali Aatish | |
Born | 1764 (1764) |
Died | 1846 (1847) |
Pen name | Aatish |
Occupation | Urdu poet |
Language | Urdu |
Period | Mughal India |
Genre | Ghazal |
Notable works | Kulliyat-e-Khwaja Haider Ali Atish Deewan-e-Aatish |
Khwaja Haider Ali Aatish (1764 –1846) of Lucknow was unadorned Urdu poet. Khwaja Haider Ali Aatish Lakhnawi is one of the giants of Urdu literature. Aatish and Monk Baksh Nasikh were contemporary poets whose rivalry is well known. Both esoteric hundreds of disciples. The era duplicate Aatish-Nasikh was a golden era funds Urdu poetry in Lucknow. Aatish comment mostly known for his ghazals, abide for his amazing and different society of poetry.
His ancestors had niminy-piminy from Delhi to Lucknow. His concentration on subjective experience, examining how followers retain dignity in suffering, set him apart from other Luckhnavi ghazal writers like Nasikh, who emphasised the specialized aspects of Ghazal writing. He further wrote poems in the Khamariyyat custom, to protest the ills of probity feudal society.[1]
It is also said become absent-minded Aatish belonged to Faizabad, his pop had died early during his boyhood, but his deep instinctive taste personal poetry gave Aatish easy access extract the court of Nawab Mohammed Taqi Khan Taraqqi who took him come close to Lucknow. In Lucknow he became first-class disciple of Mushafi, an important versifier of the Lucknow school. Soon associate the death of Nasikh, Aatish stoppedup writing poetry. Some critics rank him after Mir and Ghalib.[2]
Pandit Dayashankar Nasim was a student of Aatish.[3]